Fast Facts

Our Blue Planet

We all know what water is--a clear, odorless, tasteless liquid that we cannot live without. It is so plentiful that Earth is sometimes called the blue planet--but freshwater is a remarkably finite resource that is not evenly distributed everywhere or to everyone. Whether by its abundance or its absence, we see the effects of this singular substance in every corner of the globe and in every aspect of our daily lives.

Nearly three-quarters of Earth's surface may be covered with water, but only 3 percent of the Earth's water is fresh--and less than one-third of that is in a form or a place that makes it readily available for human consumption. More than two-thirds of Earth's freshwater supply (and 2 percent of total water) exists as ice and is stored in the polar regions and in glaciers.

Erosion by rushing surface water can change the face of Earth, but water locked in rocks as far as 125 miles beneath the surface can also play a role by enabling the slow movement of continents.

Water is remarkable for the fact that it exists in all three physical states--liquid, solid, and gas--under conditions normally found on Earth. It is also one of the few substances that is less dense as a solid than it is as a liquid, which is why ice floats. If that were not true, Earth's oceans, rivers and lakes would have long ago filled with ice.

Water is constantly in motion all around us, rising up into the sky through evaporation from rivers and oceans, and then falling back to Earth as rain or snow. Plants play a major role in the water cycle, drawing water from the soil and releasing it into the air through their leaves. One acre of broad-leafed forest may release as much as 8,000 gallons of water into the atmosphere every day.

Water has a remarkable ability to absorb and hold heat. As a result, ocean currents play a large role in Earth's climate. In one day, the Gulf Stream carries twice the heat that all the coal mined on Earth in a single year could generate.

Life in Water

Water is one of the most essential ingredients to life as we know it. Since life on Earth began in water some 3.5 billion years ago, living organisms have evolved an amazing variety of techniques for surviving in different watery conditions--from the deepest oceans to the driest deserts. Almost everywhere on Earth, animals and plants use water of all sorts, salty or fresh, hot or cold, abundant or scarce.

Humans are about 60 percent water by weight-though the percentage is slightly higher on average for men than for women. To replenish our body's water supply, a typical man needs about one gallon each day (3.7 liters), while a woman needs about 0.7 gallons (2.7 liters).

Can you survive without drinking any water at all? Kangaroo rats have super-efficient kidneys that are so good at recycling water that they get all they need from just the food they eat.

The Texas horned lizard collects and stores drinking water in channels between the scales on its back.

Albatrosses have evolved a way to drink seawater, which is too salty for most birds and land animals. To get rid of excess salt from the water and food they ingest, albatrosses have glands just behind their eye sockets that absorb salt. The glands then excrete a concentrated salt solution that drains out a duct and off the tip of the beak.

No bigger than a speck, tiny eight-legged creatures called tardigrades live either in ocean or freshwater habitats. If drought strikes, they essentially shut down their metabolism and shrivel up into a ball called a tun, waiting until water returns. They can last for years in this state and can also withstand oxygen deprivation, vacuum, and extreme heat or cold.

Bottled water everywhere, but is it good to drink?

Bottled water may be a healthy and increasingly common alternative to soft drinks, but the plastic bottle turns out to have a hidden dark side: energy consumption, waste disposal, and other environmental concerns. As bottled water grows in popularity, these problems also proliferate.

Worldwide, bottled water consumption more than doubled between 1997 and 2005, with U.S. residents tipping back the largest share--about 7.8 billion gallons total, or 26 gallons per person in 2005.

Bottled water costs as much as $10 per gallon compared to less than a penny per gallon for tap water.

It takes three liters of water to produce a one-liter bottle of water.

Worldwide, 2.7 million tons of plastic are used each year to make water bottles, but in the U.S., less than 20 percent of these bottles are recycled.

The total estimated energy needed to make, transport, and dispose of one bottle of water is equivalent to filling the same bottle one-quarter full of oil.

An estimated 40 percent of bottled water sold in the U.S. is just filtered tap water.

Water Works

Around the world, humans put water to work in an endless number of ways. We use it to raise animals and crops, to generate power, to make and move goods, even wash our hands. Not surprisingly, our reliance on Earth's limited water resources can have some far-reaching impacts.

About 8 percent of water used worldwide on average goes to domestic and municipal uses. Another 22 percent is used by industry. Agriculture--the thirstiest human activity on the planet--accounts for about 70 percent of global water use. In wealthier countries, however, the balance shifts to industry--46 percent of U.S. water use is for industrial purposes.

More than 60 percent of the world's largest rivers have been dammed or diverted, and more than 47,000 "large" dams (greater than 49 feet tall) have been constructed around the world over the past 50 years--a rate of roughly 2 dams per day.

Construction of the world's largest dam--China's Three Gorges Dam--has already required the relocation of more than 1.2 million people and submerged more than 1,000 villages and 74,000 acres of farmland.

U.S. residents use more water than people in other countries do--about 151 gallons per day on average for domestic and municipal purposes. In the U.K., people live a more water-efficient lifestyle, consuming just 31 gallons per day. In Ethiopia, people have to make do with just 3 gallons per person per day.

Today, an estimated 40 percent of the world's food supply is grown in places where crops cannot survive solely on rainfall, requiring irrigation. Water draining from farmland carries fertilizers into nearby rivers and eventually to the oceans, which feeds algae and robs the water of oxygen. In the Gulf of Mexico, one such "dead zone" is the size of New Jersey.